Art & Deal

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CHRISTIE’S | LONDON | 21 FEBRUARY 2022

Art & Deal Articles

20TH/21ST CENTURY LONDON DAY AND  ONLINE SALES NOW LIVE FOR  

BROWSING

• Following critically acclaimed institutional exhibitions works by Etel Adnan,  Eileen Agar, and Paula Rego are included in the Post-War and Contemporary  Art Day Sale 

• 20th Century masters including Paul Cézanne, Marc Chagall, Salvador Dalí,  Sonia Delaunay, Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Fernand Léger, Pablo  Picasso, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir highlight the Impressionist and Modern  Art Day and Works on Paper Sale 

• A group of six paintings by William Alsop, are offered to benefit the Stephen  Lawrence Architecture Prize in the First Open: Post-War and Contemporary  Art Online sale 

Post-War and Contemporary Art Day Sale, 2 March 2022 

LONDON – Christie’s Post-War and Contemporary Art Day is led by Banksy’s Love is  in the Air (2002, estimate: £600,000-800,000, illustrated above left) an early iteration  of his seminal ‘flower thrower’ motif. Carrying a message of peace, it was this image  that cemented Banksy’s position on the international stage, establishing him both as  an artist and as an activist. Following critically acclaimed institutional exhibitions, as  part of this auction Christie’s is offering works by Eileen Agar, Etel Adnan and Paula  

Rego. The selection includes Eileen Agar’s Return of Europa (1971, estimate:  £12,000-18,000), and Etel Adnan’s Lumière 2 (c. 1960, estimate: £50,000-70,000,  illustrated page one right) part of a selection of rare early works given to her close  friend and former roommate at University of California, Berkeley. Paula Rego’s School  for Little Witches (2009, estimate: £280,000-350,000) depicts a pictorial act of revenge  on a teacher who had terrified her as a child. 

The work of Post-War Italian masters is represented by Lucio Fontana’s early Concetto  spaziale, Attese (1960, estimate: £400,000-600,000), and a large scale sculpture Sfera con  perforazione (1977, estimate: £300,000–400,000) by Arnaldo Pomodoro. There is a figurative  section to the sale, highlighted by Rafa Macarrón’s Primera cita (First Date) (2012, estimate:  £50,000-70,000) and Mickalene Thomas’s MS. PU-SE-KAT #1 (2003, estimate: £70,000- 

100,000). At almost a metre in height, Thomas’s work represents the artist’s investigations  into African American beauty and femininity. Part of this figurative offering is Asmoako Boafo’s  monumental self-portrait, Untitled (Standing Nude) (2015, estimate: £150,000 –200,000),  Adjei Tawiah’s Pink Suit (2020, estimate: £15,000-20,000), and Atanda Quadri Adebayo’s  vibrantly colourful work, Let Love Lead (2021, estimate: £8,000-12,000). Further highlights  include Yayoi Kusama’s Pumpkin [TOWSSO] (2006, estimate: £200,000-300,000), which  focuses on one of the artist’s most celebrated and central motifs, and Flora Yukhnovich’s Study of Putti (2017, estimate: £40,000–60,000) which demonstrates the artist’s reimagining  of Rococo motifs through a contemporary lens.

Impressionist and Modern Art Day and Works on Paper Sale, 4 March 2022 

LONDON – Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Art Day and Works on Paper Sale is  highlighted by Sonia Delaunay’s Nature morte portugaise (1916, estimate: £350,000- 450,000, illustrated page one right). This painting is inspired by a sun-drenched Portuguese marketplace and belongs to a group of paintings executed in 1916, relating directly to two other compositions from the same series which are in the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. There are a number of notable Picasso works offered, including the drawing Buste de femme couchée (1939, estimate: £300,000-500,000, illustrated page two left) and a work from his blue period Mendiant à la béquille (1904, 

£200,000-300,000) reflecting a time of personal tragedy for the artist, mourning the loss of his friend Carlos Casagemas. A later Picasso work, Buste d’homme (1969, Estimate: £600,000 – 900,000) from a private collection, will be sold to benefit a charitable organisation. Otto Dix’s Dame mit schleier (1923, estimate: £80,000- 120,000) and Walter Dexel’s Lokomotive von Vorne (1922, estimate: £120,000- 180,000 are highlights from a private German collection. Alexej von Jawlensky’s Stilleben mit Tasse (1908, estimate: £150,000-250,000), a strikingly colourful still life, leads the selection offered by Deutsche Bank Collection. The artist had an increasing obsession with colour when this was painted, inspired by artists Paul Sérusier and Henri Matisse. Three Marc Chagall works are also offered spanning from the 20s to late 60s/early 70’s, Scène de cirque (1970, estimate: £600,000-900,000), Les amoureux au village sur fond rouge (1968, estimate: £350,000-550,000), and Tête de vache or La vache (1926, estimate: £250,000- 350,000), all vibrantly colourful and depicting the dream like imagery Chagall is known for. A complete set of twelve lithographs by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Elles (1896, £400,000-600,000), is one of the most celebrated and sought-after series in the history  of printmaking, depicting everyday life within a maison close (brothel) in Paris.

First Open: Post-War and Contemporary Art Online 

ONLINE – Christie’s First Open: Post-War and Contemporary Art Online is open for  bidding from 23 February until 9 March 2022. Aboudia’s 6 Partenaires (2020, estimate:  £40,000-60,000, illustrated page three left) is a monumental work featuring six of his  celebrated ghostly figures. Born in Côte d’Ivoire, Aboudia’s art is inspired by the streets  of Abidjan, his home and the country’s economic capital. Complementing the selection  of works by Eileen Agar presented in the Day Sale, Eileen Agar’s Rite of Spring (1971,  estimate: £8,000-12,000, illustrated page three right) is offered as part of our First  Open online sale. A grouping of four lots by Etel Adnan from the collection of her  former classmate and friend are offered in First Open, alongside the two paintings in  the Post-War and Contemporary Art Day Sale. 

Forty-four photographs from the Ellen and Dan Shapiro Collection include works by Diane Arbus, Candida Hofer, William Eggleston, Elger Esser, Andreas Gursky, Annie  

Leibovitz, Richard Mosse, Zanele Muholi, Irving Penn, Alex Prager, Viviane Sassen  and Cindy Sherman. Estimates range from £600-£50,000, offering collectors of all  levels an opportunity to acquire works from this visionary photography collection. 

Six paintings are offered by William Alsop, the British architect and Royal Academician, who is known as one of the UK’s greatest architectural talents. They will be sold to  benefit the Stephen Lawrence Architecture Prize, which aims to encourage and reward  new architectural talent. 

PRESS CONTACT: 

Sophia Skalbania | + +44 (0)207 104 5818 | sskalbania@christies.com 

Sara Macdonald | +44 (0)20 7752 3136 | saramacdonald@christies.com 

About Christie’s  

Founded in 1766, Christie’s is a world-leading art and luxury business. Renowned and trusted for its expert live and online auctions,  as well as its bespoke private sales, Christie’s offers a full portfolio of global services to its clients, including art appraisal, art  financing, international real estate and education. Christie’s has a physical presence in 46 countries, throughout the Americas,  Europe, Middle East, and Asia Pacific, with flagship international sales hubs in New York, London, Hong Kong, Paris and Geneva.  It also is the only international auction house authorized to hold sales in mainland China (Shanghai). 

Christie’s auctions span more than 80 art and luxury categories, at price points ranging from $200 to over $100 million. In recent  years, Christie’s has achieved the world record price for an artwork at auction (Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvador Mundi, 2017), for a  single collection sale (the Collection of Peggy and David Rockefeller, 2018), and for a work by a living artist (Jeff Koons’ Rabbit,  2019). 

Christie’s Private Sales offers a seamless service for buying and selling art, jewellery and watches outside of the auction calendar,  working exclusively with Christie’s specialists at a client’s individual pace.  

Recent innovations at Christie’s include the groundbreaking sale of the first NFT for a digital work of art ever offered at a major  auction house (Beeple’s Everydays, March 2021), with the unprecedented acceptance of cryptocurrency as a means of  payment. As an industry leader in digital innovation, Christie’s also continues to pioneer new technologies that are redefining the  business of art, including the creation of viewing and bidding experiences that integrate augmented reality, global livestreaming, buy-now channels, and hybrid sales formats. 

Christie’s is dedicated to advancing responsible culture throughout its business and communities worldwide, including achieving  sustainability through net zero carbon emissions by 2030, and actively using its platform in the art world to amplify under represented voices and support positive change.